ADVICE FOR HAVING A POST IT BOOK TALK
- Write down on a post-it what you would like to talk about
- Lay out the post-its and see if any overlap, then stack the rest (one student stacks)
- Member who wrote the first post-it on the stack reads it and then partners or members talk for as long as they can off of it
- Go to the page and read or retell the part of the book that made you want to talk
- Say what you think
- Ask your partners what they think
- Parts of the text should be read or retold to support thinking
- Make connections to other parts of the text that disprove someone’s thinking
- Members should ask each other questions to dig into responses
- Think about why the character (s) is/are behaving a certain way (motivation)
- Add what you would do if it happened to you or reminds you of . . .
- A book you read
- A character
- A story from your life
- Ask your partner or group members what they would do
- When a conversation feels finished or stuck move on to the next post it in the stack
WAYS TO RESPOND TO TEXTS
Use “post its” to mark:
- The page where you especially feel the author’s big idea, message or lesson
- Places that make you go “oh my gosh!”
- Sections that make you say, “I wonder why. . .”
- A place where the main character changes and parts that show what contributed to the change
- Sections where the book reminds you of your life
- Sections that discuss the main problem or issue in the book
- Sections that resemble another book
- When reading a mystery, clues that help unravel the mystery
- Sections which show a view of life with which the readers disagrees
- Places where the author has done something you want to try or emulate
- Cool things you want to discuss
- Places that show a central conflict
- Places where the pattern in a book is broken
- Sections that reveal something significant about a character
- A part when the reader is surprised
- Sections where secondary characters points of view are shown
- Parts that the reader find funny or moving
- Parts where there reader notices repeating actions across the book
- Places where the reader notices repeating objects
- Sections that show foreshadowing
- Sections that contain symbols
- GOT ANY OTHER IDEAS? USE THEM IN YOUR BOOK TALKS!